Histone H3.3 phosphorylation amplifies stimulation-induced transcription

Complex organisms can rapidly induce select genes in response to diverse environmental cues. This regulation occurs in the context of large genomes condensed by histone proteins into chromatin. The sensing of pathogens by macrophages engages conserved signalling pathways and transcription factors to...

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Published inNature (London) Vol. 583; no. 7818; pp. 852 - 857
Main Authors Armache, Anja, Yang, Shuang, Martínez de Paz, Alexia, Robbins, Lexi E., Durmaz, Ceyda, Cheong, Jin Q., Ravishankar, Arjun, Daman, Andrew W., Ahimovic, Dughan J., Klevorn, Thaís, Yue, Yuan, Arslan, Tanja, Lin, Shu, Panchenko, Tanya, Hrit, Joel, Wang, Miao, Thudium, Samuel, Garcia, Benjamin A., Korb, Erica, Armache, Karim-Jean, Rothbart, Scott B., Hake, Sandra B., Allis, C. David, Li, Haitao, Josefowicz, Steven Z.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 30.07.2020
Nature Publishing Group
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Summary:Complex organisms can rapidly induce select genes in response to diverse environmental cues. This regulation occurs in the context of large genomes condensed by histone proteins into chromatin. The sensing of pathogens by macrophages engages conserved signalling pathways and transcription factors to coordinate the induction of inflammatory genes 1 – 3 . Enriched integration of histone H3.3, the ancestral histone H3 variant, is a general feature of dynamically regulated chromatin and transcription 4 – 7 . However, how chromatin is regulated at induced genes, and what features of H3.3 might enable rapid and high-level transcription, are unknown. The amino terminus of H3.3 contains a unique serine residue (Ser31) that is absent in ‘canonical’ H3.1 and H3.2. Here we show that this residue, H3.3S31, is phosphorylated (H3.3S31ph) in a stimulation-dependent manner along rapidly induced genes in mouse macrophages. This selective mark of stimulation-responsive genes directly engages the histone methyltransferase SETD2, a component of the active transcription machinery, and ‘ejects’ the elongation corepressor ZMYND11 8 , 9 . We propose that features of H3.3 at stimulation-induced genes, including H3.3S31ph, provide preferential access to the transcription apparatus. Our results indicate dedicated mechanisms that enable rapid transcription involving the histone variant H3.3, its phosphorylation, and both the recruitment and the ejection of chromatin regulators. The histone variant H3.3 is phosphorylated at Ser31 in induced genes, and this selective mark stimulates the histone methyltransferase SETD2 and ejects the ZMYND11 repressor, thus revealing a role for histone phosphorylation in amplifying de novo transcription.
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equal contribution
Author Contributions: L.E.R., C.D., A.W.D., J.Q.J., A.M.P., A.R., D.J.A all contributed equally to this study as “co-second authors”. A.A. and S.Z.J. conceived and initiated the study in the lab of C.D.A. and completed the study in the lab of S.Z.J with L.E.R., C.D., A.W.D., J.Q.J., D.J.A, A.M.P., A.R., T.K. performing biochemical, cellular, and epigenomic experiments and analyzing data supervised by S.Z.J.. A.A. and S.Z.J. also performed biochemical, cellular, and epigenomic experiments and analyzed data. H.L., S.Y., and Y.Y. conceived and performed structural, binding and modelling studies. T.P. assisted A.A. with nucleosome assembly and enzymatic assays. S.T. and E.K. performed neuron experiments. M.W., K-J. A., S.Y., A.A. performed nucleosome assembly and HMTase assays. J.H. and S.B.R. performed histone peptide array antibody testing. T.A. and S.B.H. developed and tested the H3.3 antibody. S.L. performed mass spectrometry studies supervised by B.A.G.. S.Z.J. wrote the manuscript with input from all authors.
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/s41586-020-2533-0